I was taken aback by images screening on BBC
News of riot police smashing a glass door to gain access into one of the venues
being used for the referendum by Catalan separatists in Spain. The harsh clamp
down on the exercise is no doubt a reaction to the Spanish government
describing the referendum, which Catalonians hope to use to declare
independence, as illegal.
If
video clips of the riot police smashing doors were jolting, the scenes on the
streets were even more shocking. Security forces deployed maximum force in
repressing protesters in a manner that made the combined approach of Nigeria’s
military and security forces appear like the disposition of crèche staffers.
Those that opposed the police efforts to stop the referendum were clobbered,
hurled to the ground and peppered with rubber bullets.
To
achieve the ultimate objective of these actions, the police were reported to
have carted the ballot away, effectively raising questions about the integrity
of any outcome announced for the referendum. This tallies with Spain’s desire
to stick to the current arrangement where its constitution does not recognise
secession rights for Catalonia, a wealthy region of 7.5 million people in
north-eastern Spain.
The
clamp down on the “illegal” referendum came at a time when a vocal minority
from south-east Nigeria are, like broken records, chanting “referendum or
death” or “no referendum no election” in their misplaced quest to revive a
defunct republic of Biafra, the cause of a civil war five decades ago. In
recent months the rabble agitating for the breakup of Nigeria has fallen under
the control of Indigenous People of Biafra, IPoB, now officially designated as
a terror group.
IPOB
of course hinges its ridiculous for a referendum, not recognized by any
Nigerian law, on some nebulous international instruments, the relevant sections
or specific documents have never been cited. Its propaganda includes inviting
the European Union, United Kingdom and United States to meddle in Nigeria’s
internal affairs.
Interestingly,
Spain is a visible member nation of the EU. The EU has maintained a stoic
silence even when Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont has repeatedly appealed to
the EU to intervene. The bloc’s position is that Catalan’s breakaway bid and
Spain’s tough stance against it are internal affairs of that country, in which
it would not interfere. United Kingdom has also been decadently silent while US
President Donald Trump was categorical in declaring that his country is opposed
to Catalan’s independence bid, which he described as “foolish”.
One
is therefore at a loss as to why even those who lay claim to a sophisticated
level of education from the south-east of Nigeria are counting on these same
countries and the EU to help achieve in Nigeria what they are opposed to in
Spain. It is confounding that Nigeria’s pro-separatist rabble does not see
themselves as willingly handing their country over for re-colonization by their
very demand for intervention from people who are loathe accepting what is being
requested for their own selves.
More
instructive is that the Catalonians have not threatened war crime charges at
the International Criminal Court against the riot police that have violently
disrupted their referendum the same way IPoB and other Biafra separatist groups
always threaten the Nigerian Army and the police. The Catalonians definitely
know the remit and limits of international organizations.
Even
though Catalan has its distinct language, culture and economy within its
geographical space in Spain it has not misled its pro-independence followers
with lies that they are “indigenous people” with special rights that make
attacking troops commonplace.
Nigerian
military and security agencies should catch up with what has happened and
continues to happen in Spain over the Catalan issue and take cue on how not to
be intimidated by the blackmail of international bodies. It is to the credit of
the military that on the day Catalonians are getting beaten and shot at for
holding a referendum, Nigerians that truly believe in the country proudly
decked themselves in the green-white-green national colours to celebrate
Nigeria’s 57th independence anniversary. The military should help keep it so by
dealing with any threat – internal or external – that seeks to undermine the
integrity of Nigeria. This is still our country.
Murphy, a security expert writes from Calabar, Cross
River State.
Source: leadership.ng
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